I did the same thing about 2 months ago. I gave the previous company nights and weekends to "fit the needs of the company." I went into my boss' office and tried to negotiate a raise, seeing as I took on 3 full-time positions and was only getting paid for one. No dice. I then got an offer for a new job that came with an i stant raise and less responsibility. Two months later I have been promoted with another raise. I was terrified at first, leaving a company that I was used to for something new. The clincher was the previous company offered more when I put my 2 weeks notice in. I am worth more than that, and you are too. Take the offer and go to a place thay will value you for who you are, not just what you do for the company.
I Refuse to Settle for “Employee of the Year” After Bringing in $3 Million

Career success doesn’t always bring the recognition people expect. Many professionals work beyond their limits, sacrificing weekends and personal time, only to feel overlooked when it matters most. Workplace loyalty, ambition, and self-respect can collide in moments that force tough choices. One reader recently sent a letter to Bright Side about a situation that left her questioning everything.
The letter:
Dear Bright Side,
I brought in $3 million for my firm this year. I worked overtime, answered calls on weekends, and even on my holidays.
My boss congratulated me in front of everyone and gave me an “Employee of the Year” trophy. No raise. No promotion. Nothing.
I declared, “Cheap awards don’t pay the bills!” and put it in the office trash.
My boss replied, “You’re nothing but an employee! Don’t mistake success for power!”
I smiled.
Next day, I froze when HR sent us all an email. It said: “Effective immediately, all major client accounts will be reassigned. Please direct inquiries to management.”
My heart sank. They were stripping away everything I built carefully for years.
But hours later, everyone froze when they discovered I’ve been secretly interviewing with our biggest competitor for the past month. They offered me the same as my current salary, and it would give me a fresh start.
I was ready to sign. Then my boss walked into my office, closed the door, and said something I never expected.
“We’re giving you a 10% raise. Increase of benefits and more flexibility. Plus a performance bonus structure... STAY.”
Now I can’t sleep.
I gave this company 9 years. My friendships, my routines, my growth — all built here. But they only valued me when I threatened to leave.
The competitor wants my answer by Friday.
Part of me wants to stay where things are familiar. Part of me thinks I no longer have a future here.
Sometimes the hardest career decisions aren’t about money. They’re about self-respect.
What would you do?
— Paula

Thank you, Paula, for sharing your powerful story with us.
After everything you’ve built and sacrificed, it’s understandable that this decision feels heavy.
Here are our tips to help you choose what comes next.
Leverage the Panic Moment.

Leave company not worth it they didn't see your value. Other people will tell you it's your job your hired to do it and others tell you come back with a better deal but to be honest it's about the respect they will back stab you again and again
They moved your clients hours after the trophy scene, then reversed course with a rushed 10% raise. That sequence matters.
Counter with a written retention package that locks in the exact accounts you built over 9 years, a role upgrade tied to the $3M you generated, and a penalty clause if HR reassigns clients again. Make their fear produce permanent power, not temporary perks.
Force the Market to Speak.

Leave IMMEDIATELY! Look what they pulled in you after you bas8tokd your boss what to do with that participation trophy and only after you say your leaving for another company they offer you more money etc. RUN!
Yeah, they stabbed the in the back. Once they'll do it again, leave no regrets.
Have an excellent employment attorney write a contract of no less than five years and language that lets you control your clients and retain them if you leave .This is not legal, but psychological and experience. Anyone who tells you you are employee of the year and offers you no money, has no respect for you. They will just come at you from another direction. They have already shown you this. To continue to give the legal expertise that has brought in this income stream, you do not have time to watch your back enough.
Going to another firm at the same money and possibly facing lawsuits for taking clients, is not safe. Letting them know you are not only competent but someone not to mess with, is your security with written protection. They had your number, which is why they did it. CYA and be a boss until you realize you are.
You interviewed quietly while carrying weekend calls and holiday work. That’s rare leverage. Go back to the competitor and renegotiate now using real numbers: $3M revenue, zero ramp excuses, proven client trust.
Ask for a higher base plus sign-on to offset the risk. Even if you stay, this resets your market value beyond one emotional counteroffer.
Read the HR Email, Not the Words.

can I just say something it's not you you work for a company they pay you to do a job if you that good open your own business but you're not you work for company they pay you to do a specific task that's it get over yourself
The HR notice wasn’t a misunderstanding, it was intent. They were ready to erase years of relationship capital overnight. Map every flagship client you originated, grew, and stabilized. Decide based on systems, not apologies.
A company that can strip your book once may do it again when the pressure fades and memories cool.
Choose Identity Over Comfort.

Ask your present employer to put the enhanced package on paper and signed. Then go to the new employer with it and ask him to give you a better deal if he really wants you. Go if you get a better deal. Good luck.
Familiar routines are powerful after 9 years, but so is the signal they sent. Staying may lock you into a cycle where respect arrives only when you threaten exit.
Leaving gives a clean narrative reset: no trophy optics, no weekend heroics, no proving loyalty again. Pick the option that lets you sleep without waiting for the next test of power.
Fortunately, kindness still exists all around us—enough to renew our trust in people and remind us that hope never disappears. Here are 15 Stories That Show Kindness Is the Quiet Strength That Keeps the World Moving.
Comments
I would tell the new job that they have offerd you a raise too stay.... see what they say if they dont beeat or match it.. stay and then look for a new job with that as your current salary + 5 % as base salary
. If you know your good at your job sell your self a lot of the highest paid people just ask for more money, the ones who can do it well keep there jobs.
I think you should definitely leave your current company and go with your competitor. At least your competitor is offering you more money. Your current company took you too much for granted even in the end. You definitely deserve better than that. Never ever settle for anything less than you truly deserve
I most certainly would leave ...you are only of value now because they don't want you carrying your success toto their competitor ..Do not trust them ....GO to the new firm ...
I don't understand why people think they need to be rewarded for doing a job their already getting paid to do they want to make as much money as the fuckin owners it's a sad world greed has created
They don't value you they're afraid that if you leave you'll take their clients with you.
Related Reads
10 Christmas Gifts That Missed the Mark So Badly They Became Legendary

I Refuse to Stop Using My Pool Because Our Neighbor Demands It—My Home, My Rules

10 Moments That Remind Us Kindness Matters Most When the World Gets Tough

18 Moments That Teach Us to Stay Kind Even When Life Has No Mercy

I Refused to Turn Our Romantic Trip Into a Family Vacation and Faced the Consequence

15 Stories That Prove Some Memories Are Impossible to Delete

I Refuse to Give My Retirement Savings to My Adult Son—I’m Not Responsible for His Failures

I Refused to Be Treated Like a Maid in My Own Home—So I Changed the Rules

I Lost a $120K Job Over a Ridiculous Interview Test

10 Moments That Show Kindness Doing the Heavy Lifting

Our “Romantic” Vacation Was Hijacked by My Wife’s Family—And It Forced Us to Reevaluate Our Relationship

I Refuse to Let My Neighbors Ruin My Sleep—So I Got Even
